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Thunder Season Ends With Loss To Grizzlies

Kevin Durant #35 of the Oklahoma City Thunder greets fans following his team’s series loss to the Memphis Grizzlies in Game Five of the Western Conference Semifinals during the 2013 NBA Playoffs on May 15, 2013 at the Chesapeake Energy Arena in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. (Photo by Layne Murdoch/NBAE via Getty Images)

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — In a season that seemed doomed once All-Star Russell Westbrook was lost to a knee injury, Kevin Durant couldn’t save the Oklahoma City Thunder.

Facing a desperation game and one last desperation shot, Durant couldn’t come through in the clutch and give the Thunder a chance to play another day.

Durant struggled through one of the worst shooting performances of his playoff career and missed a jumper that would have tied it in the closing seconds. Oklahoma City’s season ended Wednesday night with an 88-84 loss to the Memphis Grizzlies in Game 5 of the Western Conference semifinals.

The three-time scoring champion missed a 16-foot jumper from the left wing to tie it with 6 seconds left and ended up with 21 points on 5-for-21 shooting, his third-worst performance in the postseason.

“I can live with myself knowing that I gave it all that I had,” said Durant, who played all 48 minutes.

Zach Randolph had 28 points and 14 rebounds, and Mike Conley added 13 points and 11 assists as the fifth-seeded Grizzlies advanced to the Western Conference finals for the first time in franchise history. They will face either San Antonio or Golden State in the next round.

“This is the first time, so it definitely means a lot. I’m happy, but we’ve still got work to do,” Randolph said. “I want to win a ring.”

In a series filled with games that went down to the wire, the finale fit right in — even though the Thunder trailed by 12 with 3 minutes left. Reggie Jackson’s 3-pointer finished off a 16-6 rally, cutting the deficit to 86-84 with 14.3 seconds remaining.

Randolph missed both free throws with 11.3 seconds on the clock to give the Thunder one last chance to save their season. Durant got the ball beyond the 3-point line on the left wing and navigated around Tony Allen before missing the jumper.

“That’s the shot that we wanted. … That’s the shot I will live with 100 times out of 100 times,” coach Scott Brooks said.

Allen got the rebound, was fouled and made two free throws to close it out.

The top-seeded Thunder, who made it to the NBA Finals last season, went 2-6 after Westbrook had knee surgery two games into the first round.

“I believe in our guys. I’m disappointed we didn’t win this series. I felt that we were good enough to win this series,” Brooks said.

The Thunder fell to 1-4 in elimination games over the past four seasons. Two of Durant’s worst performances came in those games, with a 5-for-23 outing against the Lakers in Game 6 of the 2010 first-round. His worst shooting performance percentage-wise in the postseason was 3 for 14 against the Grizzlies in Game 6 of the 2011 West semifinals.

“I gave it all I had for my team. I left it all out there on the floor,” said Durant, who had three of his seven turnovers in the fourth quarter. “I missed 16 shots, but I kept fighting, I kept being aggressive. That’s all I can ask for.”

Serge Ibaka had 17 points and eight rebounds before fouling out with 1:26 to play. Jackson scored 16 and Kevin Martin 10.

After letting a 14-point lead get trimmed to two, the Grizzlies regained control with a 12-2 run to start the fourth quarter and go up 76-64 with 6:03 remaining. Randolph had seven points during the stretch, including five from the foul line.

It was just a big enough cushion to finish off a series of games that all came down to the wire. The first three games featured a go-ahead basket in the final two minutes, and Game 4 went to overtime. Memphis won the final four games.

“They fought hard, they did everything that they could. Tonight, they really came back in the second half and just kept coming, kept coming,” Hollins said. “We just were fortunate to just make enough plays to win the game. That’s the way we’ve been all year, but we’ll take it. They battled us and gave us everything they had.”

Oklahoma City got a breath of life with a bizarre play midway through the third quarter when Derek Fisher’s missed 3-pointer turned into a four-point possession. Allen, who was on the bench, waved his arms to try and distract Fisher on his shot and a shirt slipped out of his hands and onto the floor near Fisher’s feet.

Referee Marc Davis ruled that Fisher’s 3-pointer should count, and Durant hit the free throw resulting from a technical against Allen to get the Thunder within 60-53. Oklahoma City got as close as 64-62 by the end of the quarter, after Fisher’s 3-pointer and a layup by Thabo Sefolosha.

But the Thunder missed eight of their first nine shots to start the fourth quarter to fall behind by 12, then couldn’t quite recover with their star struggling so badly.

“He really wanted to carry his team. He was back home, he was trying to get a win tonight and he came out really trying,” Hollins said. “Throughout the course of the series, we just tried to put pressure on him, keep fresh bodies on him. … They had to play him and he had to be the go-to guy, and we knew that. We just tried to just make him work for everything.”

Notes: NBA Commissioner David Stern attended the game and sat eight rows from the court. … Sefolosha wore a brace on his sore left hand. He played just six minutes in the first half, then played the entire third quarter. … It was the second straight game the Thunder scored the first seven points, only to give up the lead a few minutes later. … Nick Collison picked up three fouls in the first 2:35 of the second quarter and got pulled. … After the third-quarter buzzer, Jerryd Bayless made a shot from three-quarters court that did not count.